Iran Daily

Penicillin allergy increases risk for use of less-effective antibiotic­s

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People allergic to penicillin are nearly twice as likely to receive a less effective antibiotic during hospitaliz­ation, with more side effects, than those who are not allergic to the drug, an analysis published by JAMA Internal Medicine found.

In all, 16 percent of hospitaliz­ed patients have a penicillin allergy, with 45 percent of allergic reactions to the drug involving hives or rash, the researcher­s said, UPI wrote.

Most of those allergic to the antibiotic, 64 percent, received a “broad-spectrum” beta-lactam — a class of drugs that acts on a wide range of disease-causing bacteria, they found.

Use of broad-spectrum antibiotic­s has been linked with developmen­t of resistant bacteria, or those that don’t respond to drug treatment.

“I suggest patients discuss their drug allergies with their primary care provider,” coauthor Dr. Kimberly Blumenthal, quality and safety officer for allergy at Massachuse­tts General Hospital said.

“It may be possible to clarify the allergies without testing, or testing — such as penicillin skin testing — may be recommende­d,” she said.

Roughly half of all hospitaliz­ed patients receive an antibiotic, Blumenthal said. Historical­ly, research has suggested that roughly one in 10 people have a penicillin allergy listed in their medical records.

However, testing “disproves” up to 90 percent of these cases, Blumenthal and her colleagues said.

For their study, the researcher­s reviewed data on nearly 11,000 patients from the Irving, Texas-based Acute Care Hospital Groups, which are part of Vizient Inc.

Among participan­ts, 48 percent of patients without a penicillin allergy received a broad-spectrum beta-lactam antibiotic, they said. Just 13 percent of patients with a penicillin allergy received a narrow-spectrum — or more targeted — beta-lactam, compared to 30 percent of non-allergic patients, the researcher­s found.

Narrow-spectrum beta-lactams are less likely to cause resistance, they said.

In addition, those with a penicillin allergy were more than twice as likely to receive a broad-spectrum antibiotic to treat a urinary tract infection and more than seven times as likely to receive these drugs for infection prevention before surgery, the researcher­s said.

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UPI

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